- Industry leaders at the APAC Unleashed Digital Infrastructure Leaders Summit projected that AI-driven demand will spur up to US$1.4 trillion in regional infrastructure investment by 2035.
- Data centres, subsea cables and cloud capacity are expected to expand rapidly as governments and operators push for sustainable, high-density compute growth.
What happened: Leaders outlined APAC’s accelerating digital build-out
The APAC Unleashed Digital Infrastructure Leaders Summit gathered policymakers, operators and data-centre providers to assess how the region will support explosive growth in artificial-intelligence workloads. Speakers signalled that APAC could attract US$1.4 trillion in digital-infrastructure investment over the next decade, driven by soaring compute requirements from AI training, hyperscale cloud expansion and cross-border data flows.
The summit emphasised that many APAC markets are already straining under rapid digital adoption. Operators highlighted rising power density requirements, the need for diversified renewable-energy supplies, and the pressure to build both edge and core data-centre capacity. Subsea-cable developers also pointed to east-west traffic spikes, noting that international bandwidth demand is accelerating faster in APAC than in any other region.
Several governments in attendance referenced ongoing regulatory reforms aimed at streamlining land-use approvals, incentivising renewable-energy procurement and improving grid resilience. Industry leaders welcomed these moves but stressed that long-term certainty will be essential to support multi-billion-dollar infrastructure deployments.
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Why it’s important
The projections shared at the summit underscore a structural shift: AI is transforming the region’s physical infrastructure needs as dramatically as the cloud wave did a decade ago. If realised, US$1.4 trillion in investment would reshape APAC’s digital economy, enabling countries such as Singapore, Japan, South Korea and Australia to strengthen their roles as global compute hubs.
The discussions also highlight a broader truth emerging across the industry: AI expansion cannot proceed without parallel investment in power, connectivity and sustainable cooling technologies. Operators warned that without adequate planning, bottlenecks in power availability or international connectivity could slow AI adoption and undermine economic competitiveness.
For governments, the forecasts reinforce the strategic importance of digital infrastructure as a national-development priority. For investors, they point to long-term demand for high-density data-centre assets, renewable-energy integration and subsea-cable capacity across the region.
